When I was younger, I thought I could outsmart my computer.
I thought the more times I ran the 'fast' program (which was an executable provided for people who didn't have a turbo button to increase the processor speed) the faster it would become. This eventually reached an OCD-esque level of running 'fast' four times, and 'fast ultra' and 'fast mega' twice respectively. I was convinced this made my games run a bit better than just running 'fast' once.
I also thought that by changing the BIOS settings and telling it I had a bigger hard drive, it would actually give me a bigger hard drive.
I was stuck in Space Quest 2, and frustrated that I still wasn't on disk 3. DIR of disk 3 revealed three files, one of which was very obviously the game's data. I tried for hours to somehow run this file so I could start at the beginning of disk 3 (which later turned out to be Vohaul's asteroid). I don't think I ever thought of renaming the file as the first data file, though I doubt that would have worked either.
Incidentally, wasn't that the great thrill of old school adventuring? Walking into a new screen and being told to insert a different disk? Wow, we're making progress at last!
I couldn't understand why my CGA card would only let me play in one of the two shite palettes (orange, red, blue, green or cyan, black, white, magenta) but while playing around in BASIC I could make it display sixteen different colours of text at the same time.
When we got a new PC, I loaded up Dr Sbaitso (heh) and tried to explain what was going to happen to him. I even offered to 'save' him by copying him onto a floppy drive.
I really wanted to print the shuttle launch pad picture from Project Space Station (
clicky) to colour in and hang on my wall. My dismay that 'print screen' only gave me the text was compounded by confusion - the printer at school attached to the C64
looked the same, and we'd been printing off all kinds of pictures from
The Newsroom (gotta love the company name too, Ariolasoft).
The kid across the road tried to get his copy of Willy Beamish to work but failed - high density 5.25s didn't work in my low density 5.25 drive. He did, however, painstakingly reproduce all the nuts and bolts for the Search For The King copy protection for me.
I used to spend hours with my illicit copy of Indycar Racing typing 'the' and 'and' in, as eventually one of these would work. I memorized most of the Stunts! copy protection words. Another friend had to bring his dad's laptop over and install Laplink (remember that?) because his illict copy of Star Trek: 25th Anniversary had one file that was 7Mb and this was in the days before splitting a zip file across multiple disks.
I remember some girls in the school library trying to play King's Quest 3 and, frustrated by the parser being uncooperative, tried to talk sense into it. When it failed to understand this, they ended up telling it they didn't like it and, yes, eventually resorted to just swearing.
We had an EGA card with dipswitches on it, bought cheaply from the friend with the laptop. After hours of trying different combinations, we got one to work which alas would start the computer up in huge chunky text mode. After you ran a program, though, the C prompt would be back in normal size text. Later, we bought a knock-off Adlib card from a dodgy Chinese PC store. This would emit a blaring BEEEEEEEP when the PC was switched on, until a program used the card to play music. We ended up having to add the crappy music demonstration software included with the card to the autoexec.bat, so as to have it shut the damn thing up as quickly as possible.
Many was the time I tried C64 disks in a PC or Apple, and vice versa. I don't think I saw anything beyond gibberish on the screen until on a very old Mac Classic which at least recognized it as an MS-DOS formatted disk.
We were all delighted when someone brought their Master System pad in after noticing the plug was the same as on the C64's joystick port. Double joy when - yes - it worked!